Advocacy(In(Conflict( !!!!!!! SeminarNote((fletcher.tufts.edu/~/media/Fletcher/Microsites/World...

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Advocacy In Conflict Seminar Note February 28 – March 1, 2013 The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy The WPF Seminar Series The World Peace Foundation, an operating foundation affiliated solely with The Fletcher School, aims to provide intellectual leadership on issues of peace, justice and security. It believes that innovative research and teaching are critical to the challenges of making peace around the world, and should go handinhand with advocacy and practical engagement with the toughest issues. It regularly convenes expert seminars to address today’s most pressing issues. This seminar was initiated by students at the Fletcher School, whose proposal won the annual WPF student seminar contest. This seminar note is organized around prominent themes that emerged throughout the seminar. Participants’ responses were non attributable. OVERVIEW International (principally American) campaigns that advocate policies and actions in conflicts around the world have gained profile and impact in the last decade, most notably through new models that value mass mobilization of the American public, celebrity involvement, and marketing campaigns. The “advocacy in conflict” seminar addressed a discernible divergence between the goals, methods and impacts of these campaigns, and the requirements for resolving the political conflicts in the countries concerned and empowering the affected people. The recent case that has drawn most controversy is the KONY2012 video by the group Invisible Children, which sparked deep disquiet among Ugandans and specialists in the region. The KONY2012 case crystallized the deepening concern among humanitarians, human rights organizations and conflict resolution specialists over a series of campaigns in Africa and elsewhere. Rather than “speaking truth to power” such campaigns too often speak halftruths on behalf of power. The seminar sought to extend the discussion of contemporary activism. It brought together analysis of the African cases most often under the spotlight—especially Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), but also with discussions of Sudan and South Sudan—with cases less often analyzed, namely Burma/Myanmar and Gaza. The seminar also aimed to explore how campaigns for international responses interlocked with structures of power and narratives of change. A theme that recurred throughout the seminar was the distinction between two kinds of activism: one, principled solidarity with the people affected, pursuing solutions that they themselves define; and two, advocacy for a U.S. (or other western nation) policy response, that frequently defines success in terms of adopting a policy, rather than resolving the situation in the country concerned.

Transcript of Advocacy(In(Conflict( !!!!!!! SeminarNote((fletcher.tufts.edu/~/media/Fletcher/Microsites/World...

Advocacy  In  Conflict  

   

 

               

 

 

   

Seminar  Note    

February  28  –  March  1,  2013  

The  Fletcher  School  of  Law  and  Diplomacy  

 

 The  WPF  Seminar  Series  

The   World   Peace   Foundation,   an  operating   foundation   affiliated  solely   with   The   Fletcher   School,  aims   to   provide   intellectual  leadership   on   issues   of   peace,  justice   and   security.     It   believes  that   innovative   research   and  teaching   are   critical   to   the  challenges   of   making   peace  around   the  world,   and   should   go  hand-­‐in-­‐hand   with   advocacy   and  practical   engagement   with   the  toughest   issues.   It   regularly  convenes   expert   seminars   to  address   today’s   most   pressing  issues.    

This  seminar  was  initiated  by  students  at  the  Fletcher  School,  whose  proposal  won  the  annual  WPF  student  seminar  contest.  

This  seminar  note  is  organized  around  prominent  themes  that  emerged  throughout  the  seminar.  Participants’  responses  were  non-­‐attributable.  

 

OVERVIEW  

International  (principally  American)  campaigns  that  advocate  policies  and  actions  in  conflicts  around  the  world  have  gained  profile  and  impact  in  the  last  decade,  most  notably  through  new  models  that  value  mass  mobilization  of  the  American  public,  celebrity  involvement,  and  marketing  campaigns.  The  “advocacy  in  conflict”  seminar  addressed  a  discernible  divergence  between  the  goals,  methods  and  impacts  of  these  campaigns,  and  the  requirements  for  resolving  the  political  conflicts  in  the  countries  concerned  and  empowering  the  affected  people.  The  recent  case  that  has  drawn  most  controversy  is  the  KONY2012  video  by  the  group  Invisible  Children,  which  sparked  deep  disquiet  among  Ugandans  and  specialists  in  the  region.  The  KONY2012  case  crystallized  the  deepening  concern  among  humanitarians,  human  rights  organizations  and  conflict  resolution  specialists  over  a  series  of  campaigns  in  Africa  and  elsewhere.  

Rather  than  “speaking  truth  to  power”  such  campaigns  too  often  speak  half-­‐truths  on  behalf  of  power.  

The  seminar  sought  to  extend  the  discussion  of  contemporary  activism.  It  brought  together  analysis  of  the  African  cases  most  often  under  the  spotlight—especially  Uganda  and  the  Democratic  Republic  of  Congo  (DRC),  but  also  with  discussions  of  Sudan  and  South  Sudan—with  cases  less  often  analyzed,  namely  Burma/Myanmar  and  Gaza.  The  seminar  also  aimed  to  explore  how  campaigns  for  international  responses  interlocked  with  structures  of  power  and  narratives  of  change.  

A  theme  that  recurred  throughout  the  seminar  was  the  distinction  between  two  kinds  of  activism:  one,  principled  solidarity  with  the  people  affected,  pursuing  solutions  that  they  themselves  define;  and  two,  advocacy  for  a  U.S.  (or  other  western  nation)  policy  response,  that  frequently  defines  success  in  terms  of  adopting  a  policy,  rather  than  resolving  the  situation  in  the  country  concerned.  

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Among  the  cases  discussed  were:  

• Sudan,  with  special  attention  to  the  conflict  and  atrocities  in  the  Nuba  Mountains  in  1990s,  and  reference  to  Darfur  and  the  Sudan-­‐South  Sudan  conflicts;  

• Uganda  and  the  conflict  with  the  Lord’s  Resistance  Army  (LRA);  • Democratic  Republic  of  the  Congo,  notably  the  issue  of  “conflict  minerals”;  • Burma/Myanmar,  analyzing  the  democracy  movement,  the  suppression  of  ethnic  minorities  and  

abuses  associated  with  those  wars  and  how  the  campaign  focus  has  shifted  since  Burma’s  rapprochement  with  the  U.S.;  

• The  parallel  and  polarized  advocacies  associated  with  conflict  and  violence  in  the  Gaza  Strip.    

The  participants  in  the  seminar  agreed  that  we  face  a  collective  challenge:  to  reclaim  activism  as  solidarity  with  conflict-­‐affected  populations,  who  should  establish  the  agenda  and  goals  and  lead  action.  This  task  is  an  ethical,  intellectual  and  policy  agenda.  Among  the  questions  that  emerged  are  the  following:  

• The  agency,  knowledge,  and  accountability  of  international  versus  local  actors;    • Models  and  precedents:  how  lessons  are  learned  and  adapted  across  cases;  • Strategies  and  goals  adopted  by  advocacy  groups  as  they  define  the  conflict  and  identify  their  

constituencies  and  audiences;  • Distinctions  between  campaigns  concerned  with  structural  or  cross-­‐cutting  issues,  and  those  

focused  on  particular  crises;  • Constraints  on  goals,  strategies,  and  target  audiences  arising  from  the  leadership  and  financing  of  

these  campaigns,  and  the  political  orientation  of  their  membership;  • The  professional  incentives  that  arise,  for  policymakers  and  scholars,  from  a  well-­‐resourced  and  

publicly  valued  form  of  activism  in  western  countries;  • The  strengths  and  weaknesses  of  human  rights  as  a  framework  for  demanding  political  change;  • The  intolerance  of  criticism  and  resistance  to  debate  that  too  often  arises  from  a  narrative  of  

human  rights  and  ethical  absolutes.  

Reclaiming  “Activism”  

The  great  majority  of  political  activists  around  the  world  pursue  causes  that  directly  affect  their  interests  and  rights.  Often  they  enlist  others,  who,  motivated  by  solidarity  and  outrage,  are  ready  to  contribute  effort  and  sacrifice,  bringing  professional  skills  and  wider  connections  to  assist  the  cause.  Political  activism  overlaps  with  philanthropy  insofar  as  both  are  motivated  by  compassion  and  humanity.  But  while  charity  is  a  depoliticizing  activity,  stripping  political  agency  away  from  its  beneficiaries,  political  activism  should  be  an  exercise  in  the  political  empowerment  of  subjects.  The  greater  the  distance  between  the  activist  and  the  concerned  community,  and  the  greater  the  discrepancy  in  power  and  profile  between  the  two,  the  more  important  it  is  for  the  activist  to  ensure  that  he  or  she  is  truly  supportive  of  the  agenda  of  the  concerned  

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“activism”  has  been  redesigned  as  changing  domestic  policies  in  

western  capitals    

 

people  and  accountable  to  them.  

Paradigmatic  examples  of  activism  in  support  of  faraway  people  deprived  of  their  rights  were  the  worldwide  anti-­‐colonial  and  anti-­‐Apartheid  movements.  The  international  movement  against  the  Vietnam  War  was  not  primarily  a  liberal  human  rights  movement:  rather  it  was  a  challenge  to  U.S.  global  power  (“neo-­‐imperialism”)  and  militarism,  and  in  support  of  the  right  of  the  Vietnamese  to  determine  their  own  political  future.  In  the  U.S.,  the  leaders  of  the  domestic  civil  rights  movements  were  active  in  support  of  their  African  counterparts,  with  bonds  of  solidarity  forged  by  the  similarities  of  their  plights  and  struggles.  

A  curiosity  of  the  last  decade  of  western  advocacy  on  conflicts  is  that  a  wholly  different  relationship  has  arisen  between  the  “activist”  and  the  affected  community.  Led  by  groups  such  as  the  Enough  Project,  “activism”  has  been  redesigned  as  an  entirely  domestic  endeavor:  changing  policies  in  western  capitals  by  mobilizing  constituencies  around  celebrities  and  publicity.  Success  is  measured  by  the  extent  to  which  advocates  can  convince  a  domestic  population  that  simple  actions  they  can  take  will  produce  fundamental  change  in  distant  conflict-­‐ridden  places.  Through  highly-­‐produced  multimedia  products,  celebrity  spokespersons,  and  simplified  narratives,  a  new  set  of  practices  is  developing.  Invariably,  the  answers  these  campaigns  propose  are  framed  as  apolitical:  clothed  in  ethical  absolutes,  impervious  to  critique,  and  challenging  to  the  activist’s  own  government  only  to  the  extent  that  it  is  called  upon  to  do  more.  The  message  is  one  of  empowerment—but  the  empowerment  of  a  domestic  constituency,  consisting  of  people  not  affected  by  conflict.  The  KONY2012  video  skillfully  makes  its  viewers  believe  that  someone  tweeting  @justinbieber  is  as  courageous  and  significant  as  the  protesters  that  brought  down  the  dictatorship  in  Tunisia.  

Two  divergent  examples  help  illustrate  the  contrast  between  a  classic  model  of  activism  in  support  of  local  initiative,  and  “designer  activism”  that  promotes  a  product  in  a  western  mediatized  marketplace.    

The  Nuba  of  Sudan:  Local  script,  foreign  solidarity  

In  1992-­‐93,  the  Sudanese  government,  at  the  height  of  its  Islamist  revolution,  launched  an  offensive  against  the  peoples  of  the  Nuba  Mountains,  people  who  follow  diverse  cultures  and  faiths  who  are  located  within  northern  Sudan.  The  attacks  provide  an  extreme  example  of  asymmetry  in  capacity—a  government  army  and  air  force  pitted  against  a  poor,  isolated  community.  It  aimed  not  only  at  defeating  the  rebels  of  the  Sudan  People’s  Liberation  Army  (SPLA)  but  also  at  relocating  the  Nuba  population  from  its  homeland  and  forcibly  transforming  their  society  and  culture.  Yet  the  Nuba  managed  an  extraordinary  feat  of  self-­‐organization  and  community  cohesion.  They—coupled  with  dissent  within  the  Sudanese  government  and  wider  society—successfully  resisted  the  onslaught  and  thereby  rescued  their  own  people.  This  had  the  positive  outcome  of  strengthening  the  Nuba  people’s  own  democratic  practices.  Only  a  handful  of  outsiders  were  aware  of  the  circumstances  at  the  time,  and  they  focused  their  engagement  around  solidarity  with  the  Nuba-­‐led  movement.  Central  to  their  activism  was  self-­‐effacement:  although  the  project  

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Another  term  is  needed  to  describe  publicity-­‐based  

awareness  campaigns  to  give  American  youth  a  transient  and  

likely  illusory  sense  of  empowerment.    

 

of  gaining  access  to  the  Nuba  Mountains  and  providing  support  involved  infinitely  more  dangers  than  the  choreographed  field  visits  of  designer  activists  today,  the  focus  of  the  campaign  was  entirely  on  what  the  Nuba  people  were  doing  for  themselves,  not  on  the  heroic  drama  of  an  ostensible  international  rescue.  

Subsequent  international  engagement  with  the  Nuba  issue  led  to  a  number  of  unfortunate  consequences:  the  involvement  of  Christian  evangelists  contributed  to  religious  polarization,  and  the  subsuming  of  the  Nuba  conflict  into  a  north-­‐south  framework  for  resolving  Sudan’s  civil  war  led  to  an  unsatisfactory  peace  agreement,  that  predictably  unraveled  in  2011  when  South  Sudan  seceded,  leaving  the  Nuba  isolated  within  northern  Sudan.  

KONY2012:  Foreign  script,  local  alienation  

On  March  5,  2012,  Invisible  Children  (IC)  released  their  video,  KONY2012,  designed  to  make  the  leader  of  the  LRA  Joseph  Kony  “famous”  among  youth  in  the  United  States,  thereby  supporting  U.S.  military  action  in  Uganda,  leading  to  the  arrest  of  Kony,  and  his  trial  at  the  International  Criminal  Court  (ICC).  In  addition  to  the  contorted  logic  of  this  plan,  the  video  was  not  accurate,  grossly  simplified  the  situation  today  in  Uganda,  asked  the  U.S.  government  to  do  what  it  was  already  doing  (deploy  military  advisers),  didn’t  take  up  the  question  of  the  U.S.’s  refusal  to  join  the  ICC,  and,  most  significantly,  ignored  the  hard  work  Ugandans  had  been  engaged  in  for  years  which  had  resulted  in  Kony  being  removed  from  Uganda  so  that  

peace  could  return,  and  a  process  of  reconstruction  and  reconciliation.  Instead,  the  video  opted  to  tell  young  Americans  that  change  was  easy,  and  could  be  effected  by  them.  The  editing  of  the  video  was  superb  but  transmitted  a  wholly  misleading  message  that  was  possible  only  because  of  the  remoteness  of  the  people  of  northern  Uganda,  who  were  unable  to  answer  back.  The  staff  of  IC  knew  that  they  were  misleading  their  viewers.    

The  video  exceeded  100  million  hits  in  one  week—the  fastest  pace  for  an  online  video  to  reach  this  mark—vastly  surpassing  

IC’s  expectations  for  their  campaign.  Instead  of  reducing  the  LRA  to  its  true  size  and  significance—a  band  of  a  few  hundred  marauders  in  a  remote  forest—IC  elevated  the  mystique  of  its  leader  in  a  way  that  he  could  rarely  have  dreamed.  While  some  people  in  the  region  believed  that  because  the  campaign  had  reached  the  White  House,  President  Barack  Obama  was  now  certain  to  take  decisive  action  to  solve  the  problem,  many  Ugandans  were  horrified  and  there  were  even  demonstrations  against  KONY2012  and  its  agenda.  

Activism  defined  as  solidarity  with  demands  articulated  by  a  conflict-­‐affected  population  is  an  honorable  commitment.  But  another  term  is  needed  to  describe  publicity-­‐based  awareness  campaigns  to  give  American  youth  a  transient  and  likely  illusory  sense  of  empowerment.    

 

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Situating  the  Key  Actors  

International  advocacy  plays  an  important  role  in  responses  to  conflicts  across  the  world.  People  immediately  affected  by  conflict  are  rarely  able  to  influence  power  centers  such  as  Washington  DC,  where  policies  and  decisions  can  have  a  profound  impact  on  their  future.  These  people  are  not  always  in  a  position  to  imagine  long-­‐term  strategies  nor  do  they  necessarily  have  a  platform  that  enables  their  insights  to  be  taken  seriously.  But  the  key  question  is  how  the  relationship  between  international  networks  and  local  actors  is  structured.  Sustainable  change  in  societies,  even  those  in  conflict,  is  only  possible  when  structures  of  power  become  more  accountable  to  their  populations.  Activism  led  from  foreign  capitals  either  deliberately  or  inadvertently  empowers  a  public  distant  from  the  risks  and  solutions  to  a  conflict,  rather  than  further  empowering  those  conflict-­‐affected  populations.  This  runs  a  danger  of  ignoring  how  responses  designed  around  domestic  political  opportunities  in  western  capitals  can  actually  participate  in  the  very  harm  they  claim  to  be  ending,  or  create  new  harms.  Celebrity  activism  also  generates  a  narrative  that  places  the  celebrity  at  the  center  of  the  story,  as  a  heroic  figure  righting  wrongs  in  a  fantasy  of  redemption.  The  celebrity  activists’  simple  sketch  of  harm  as  the  product  of  ethical  imbalance  lacks  an  understanding  of  how  power  operates  in  both  the  conflict-­‐affected  society  as  well  as  their  own,  and  therefore  blinds  such  activism  to  its  own  productive  role  in  the  conditions  it  claims  to  want  to  ameliorate.  

However,  a  simple  call  to  reverse  this  priority  and  privilege  the  local,  while  it  would  produce  some  improvements,  may  not  be  enough  to  grasp  the  core  dynamics  at  play.  As  demonstrated  across  the  board  in  the  cases  examined  in  the  seminar,  international  NGOs  along  with  western  policymakers  and  the  media,  have  established  a  dominant  human  rights  framework  with  an  attendant  narrative  of  rescue  from  evil  that  has  become  internalized  among  many  local  actors  as  well.  This  is  particularly  the  case  where  those  local  actors  are  relatively  powerless  and  lack  self-­‐confidence,  so  they  may  cling  to  foreign  explanations  of  their  plight,  setting  aside  their  own  deeper  understandings.  Local  actors’  expectations  and  demands  may  follow  accordingly.  There  is  further  a  significant  power  imbalance  between  local  actors  and  international  NGOs,  visible  most  notably  in  terms  of  access  to  funds.    

The  imbalance  of  power,  including  the  power  to  define  the  conflict  and  shape  the  response  is  illustrated  across  the  board  in  cases  discussed.    

The  Burmese  case  is  instructive:  for  years,  when  the  country  was  of  little  strategic  or  commercial  significance  to  the  U.S.,  Burmese  dissidents  and  international  activists  defined  the  problem  in  simplified  black-­‐and-­‐white  terms  and  called  for  total  reform.  When  Burma  achieved  strategic  importance  after  2008,  Burmese  activists  no  longer  set  the  agenda,  allowing  for  a  “Buddhist  turn”  in  western  advocacy:  unable  to  change  the  reality,  activists  have  been  content  to  change  their  perception.  Very  little  has  changed  in  

Sustainable  change  in  societies,  even  those  in  

conflict,  is  only  possible  when  structures  of  power  become  more  accountable  to  their  

populations.  

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It  should  be  noted  that  simplistic  narratives  tend  to  

empower  actors  whose  interests  do  not  coincide  with  those  of  the  affected  people.    

Burma,  except  the  international  narrative.  Indeed,  the  repression  of  ethnic  minorities  that  reside  in  resource-­‐rich  areas  may  be  set  to  worsen,  notwithstanding  some  of  the  trappings  of  political  liberalization.  

Other  instances  of  power  relations  in  defining  problems  and  solutions  include  the  expectation  from  rebel  groups  in  Darfur  that  an  international  intervention  might  yet  come  to  “save”  them.  This  false  expectation  

impeded  the  Darfur  peace  process.  Among  people  in  the  area  affected  by  the  LRA,  the  profile  and  publicity  generated  by  KONY2012  has  led  many  to  believe  that  a  massive  policy  shift  from  the  U.S.—including  the  deployment  of  tens  of  thousands  of  troops—would  be  forthcoming.  In  Congo,  rights-­‐talk  that  refuses  to  address  the  role  of  neighboring  countries,  in  particular  Rwanda,  casts  a  shadow  over  all  international  engagement.  In  the  case  of  Gaza,  the  state  of  Israel  adeptly  allows  law-­‐based  

advocacy  because  the  Israeli  courts  consistently  decide  in  favor  of  the  state.  The  internationally  accepted  script  for  the  Gaza  conflict  is  that  a  democratic  Israeli  state  is  confronting  terrorists  across  its  border,  rather  than  that  of  an  occupying  power  failing  to  meet  its  obligations  to  protect  and  provide  for  the  local  population.    

And,  it  should  be  noted  that  simplistic  narratives  tend  to  empower  actors  whose  interests  do  not  coincide  with   those  of   the  affected  people.   Joseph  Kony’s  power  arises  out  of   the  very  narrative  of  his  mystical  strength   that   IC’s   campaign   sought   to   elevate.   Ironically,   therefore,   the   goals   of   IC   and   the   LRA  converged—to  paint  him  and  the  terror  he  is  able  to  inspire  as  being  of  significance  out  of  proportion  to  his   actual   capabilities.   The   hardliners   in   the   Sudanese   military   are   repeatedly   strengthened   in   their  domestic   power   struggles   by   the   saber-­‐rattling   of   American   Darfur   campaigners,   the   arrest   warrants  issued  by   the   International  Criminal  Court,  and   the  partisan   reports  of   the  Satellite  Sentinel  Project   that  publishes  intelligence-­‐style  reports  on  Sudanese  troop  movements,  but  never  on  their  adversaries.  

Precedents  

An  underlying  theme  of  the  discussions  was  the  risk  of  romanticizing  previous  efforts  and  of  applying  the  wrong  precedent.  This  thread  was  introduced  when  one  speaker  cited  a  common,  but  arguably  mistaken  understanding  of  the  Vietnam  war.  Contrary  to  widely-­‐held  beliefs  in  the  U.S.,  the  war  ended  less  because  of  the  shifts  in  American  public  opinion  and  more  because  the  Vietnamese  had  made  the  war  unsustainable  for  the  U.S.  The  war  was  fought  equally  in  the  political  and  military  spheres—and  the  U.S.  lost.  It  was  not  American  public  opinion,  but  Vietnamese  local  actors  who  played  the  leading  role  in  the  ending.    

Similarly,  Burmese  activists  cited  the  example  of  South  Africa’s  transition  as  a  “success  story”  of  isolating  an  oppressive  regime  and  thereby  forcing  into  making  concessions  with  a  democratic  opposition.  In  hindsight,  there  are  many  South  Africans  who  wonder  if  they  could  have  constructed  the  transition  differently,  as  the  fundamental  structures  of  socio-­‐economic  inequality  remained  intact.  Burmese,  like  

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The  precedents  that  would  make  more  sense  are  those  

within  a  country’s  own  history  of  struggle  for  rights.      

South  Africans,  are  coming  to  regret  their  embrace  of  international  sanctions  against  the  regime,  which  also  isolated  the  wider  population.  

Another  “success  story”  that  warrants  closer  interrogation  is  the  campaign  to  prohibit  anti-­‐personnel  land  mines.  Many  of  the  activists  involved  in  initiating  and  running  this  campaign  feared  that  the  Ottawa  Convention  that  introduced  a  partial  ban  on  anti-­‐personnel  land  mines  was  premature.  Many  campaigners  believed  that  with  this  partial  ban,  success  had  been  achieved.  However,  the  ban  was  incomplete—the  U.S.  did  not  sign  up,  and  there  was  no  global  fund  set  up  for  land  mine  eradication—while  the  supposed  victory  meant  that  the  popular  campaign  was  demobilized  before  its  ultimate  objectives  could  be  achieved.  The  lesson  from  this  example  is  that  activists  must  be  careful  not  to  equate  obtaining  a  tool  (a  legal  measure  such  as  a  convention)  with  success  in  solving  the  problem  (which  requires  a  deeper  shift  in  morality  and  behavior,  and  more  resources).  

Another  example  is  the  conflict  minerals  strategy  in  DRC,  which  took  as  its  model  from  the  Kimberley  Process  designed  to  combat  the  trade  in  “blood  diamonds”  that  had  fueled  conflicts  in  Sierra  Leone  and  Liberia.  Given  significant  differences  between  the  capacity  to  source  and  control  other  artisanal  minerals  versus  diamonds,  and  the  fact  that  these  minerals  constituted  just  one  part  of  the  overall  Congolese  war  economy,  this  precedent  had  limited  applicability.  When  the  Enough  Project  took  this  issue  on,  it  soon  found  that  the  consensus  among  specialists  was  against  its  position,  but  preferred  to  disregard  evidence  and  expertise  on  and  from  Congo,  defining  success  as  passing  a  bill  in  Congress,  not  changing  things  for  the  better  on  the  ground.  

The  precedents  that  would  make  more  sense  are  those  within  a  country’s  own  history  of  struggle  for  rights.    The  Congolese  for  instance,  have  a  long  history  of  strong  civil  society  engagement  that  has  set  the  political  agenda  for  the  country,  associated  with  a  pronounced  tendency  not  to  vote  along  ethnic  lines—maintaining  a  remarkable  nationwide  identity  as  Congolese.  For  Congolese  activists,  the  issue  of  “conflict  minerals”  was  a  minor  issue  on  their  agenda.  Their  central  concern  has  been  the  elections.  Congolese  activists  are  also  concerned  at  the  way  in  which  their  country  has  become  something  of  a  playground  for  foreigners  seeking  good  causes,  ranging  from  minerals  to  child  soldiers  to  sexual  violence:  “anyone  can  make  a  name  for  themselves  by  talking  about  Congo.”  Congolese  pose  a  test  for  foreign  activists:  can  they  share  what  they  write  with  their  Congolese  sources,  and  if  they  do,  will  those  Congolese  remain  friends  with  them?  

Sudan  also  has  a  strong  tradition  of  non-­‐violent  political  action  in  which  domestic  civil  society  sets  a  national  political  agenda,  but  the  potential  for  a  social  movement  of  this  kind  has  been  profoundly  compromised  by  an  international  advocacy  agenda  that  advocated  foreign  military  intervention  and  partition.  Uganda  also  has  developed  indigenous  models  for  reconciliation  in  the  aftermath  of  its  internal  conflicts,  often  undertaken  with  great  bravery  by  local  actors,  that  might  serve  as  stronger  precedents  for  envisioning  responses  to  its  challenges  today.  

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 As  so  often  occurs,  the  charitable  relationship  

disempowers  its  recipients  and  delegitimizes  their  political  

claims.  

Contending  Advocacies  

Advocacy  for  human  rights  and  against  violence  and  armed  conflict  has  historically  defined  itself  in  opposition  to  the  powers-­‐that-­‐be.  The  new  generation  of  U.S.-­‐based  activists  aim  for  a  privileged  position  within  the  policy  dialogue  inside  the  nation’s  capital  with  Congress  and  the  Administration,  and  similarly  with  respect  to  the  debates  in  the  United  Nations  Security  Council.  A  lot  of  this  work  is  therefore  better  described  as  lobbying  rather  than  advocacy.  However,  by  publicly  positioning  themselves  as  “activists,”  these  groups  tend  to  crowd  out  other  voices—including  dissenting  opinions  from  the  affected  countries.  

A  critically  important  example  of  contending  advocacies  is  the  case  of  Gaza,  which  takes  the  form  of  advocacy  for  or  against  Israel.  On  the  Israeli  side,  there  is  a  largely  successful  attempt  to  present  the  

conflict  as  symmetrical  between  two  equal  warring  parties.  The  Israeli  script  is  that  it  is  a  democracy  (the  only  one  in  the  Middle  East)  which  has  withdrawn  from  Gaza;  terrorists  have  taken  control  in  Gaza  and  are  threatening  Israel;  and  Israel  is  responding  in  self-­‐defense.  However,  the  Israeli  government  is  imposing  de  facto  occupation  on  Gaza,  while  refusing  the  international  legal  obligations  that  accompany  occupation.  Israel  is  normalizing  the  status  quo  in  both  Israel  and  the  Palestinian  Territories,  and,  on  the  basis  of  ostensible  withdrawal  from  Gaza,  

reducing  the  problems  there  to  a  humanitarian  issue.  As  so  often  occurs,  the  charitable  relationship  disempowers  its  recipients  and  delegitimizes  their  political  claims.  

However,  both  Israeli  rights  organizations  and  international  advocates  are  challenging  this  narrative.  They  face  enormous  obstacles  in  doing  so,  including  the  near-­‐impossibility  of  gaining  access  to  Gaza  to  witness  what  is  happening,  and  a  dominant  script  that  portrays  Israel  as  the  historic  victim  and  the  persistently    injured  party.  There  are  many  ironies,  including  the  actual  conduct  of  the  Israeli  state  in  denying  basic  commodities  and  basic  dignity:  “engineering  the  Palestinians  into  perpetual  beggars.”  Another  is  the  widespread  readiness  of  Israelis  to  accept  ignorance  about  what  is  going  on:  in  general,  Israelis  “don’t  want  to  know.”  But  the  facts  speak  for  themselves:  most  ceasefires  were  broken  by  Israel,  the  level  of  nutrition  available  for  the  Gazans  is  below  international  standards,  and  Gaza  continues  to  be  “one  big  prison.”  

Human  rights  language  currently  provides  the  best  opportunity  for  opening  debate  on  political  options,  including  the  possibility  of  a  “one-­‐state  solution.”  But  some  activists  are  worried  that  pursuing  incremental  improvements  through  human  rights  and  humanitarian  actions  is  merely  legitimizing  a  system  that  is  profoundly  unjust  and  resistant  to  significant  reform.  Some  Palestinians  are  now  saying,  “save  us  from  the  saviors!”  and  want  the  brute  realities  of  the  occupation  to  be  recognized.  

The  Israel-­‐Palestine  case,  so  often  treated  as  sui  generis  and  in  isolation  from  other  instances,  is  an  illuminating  comparison  and  contrast.  This  is  helpful  for  drawing  lessons,  both  for  this  and  other  cases,  and  

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 The  emergent  model  of  western-­‐focused  advocacy  has  as  its  core  approach  a  set  of  practices  that  focus  on  the  institutional  and  political  priorities  of  the  western  

advocacy  groups  themselves.    

for  normalizing  the  study  of  the  Israel-­‐Palestinian  conflict.  One  intriguing  connection  is  that  young  Jewish  people  in  the  U.S.  were  heavily  involved  in  championing  campaigns  around  Rwanda  and  Darfur.  In  contrast  to  the  standard  Jewish  narrative  that  positions  the  Holocaust  as  an  historically  unique  episode,  this  generation  is  applying  a  Jewish  sensibility  to  suffering  to  other  cases  in  the  world.  Notwithstanding  some  missteps  in  the  portrayal  of  these  conflicts,  this  represents  a  significant  globalization  of  the  Jewish  conscience.  

Not  All  Theories  Of  Change  Are  Equally  Valid  

A  theory  of  change  includes  an  end-­‐goal  and  the  steps  necessary  to  achieve  that  goal.  Along  the  way,  one  might  debate  the  final  goal,  the  strategy  for  getting  there  or  the  tactics.  However,  as  the  examples  discussed  demonstrate,  these  components  need  to  be  considered  in  an  integrated  and  holistic  manner.  

The  emergent  model  of  western-­‐focused  advocacy  has  as  its  core  approach  a  set  of  practices  that  focus  on  the  institutional  and  political  priorities  of  the  western  advocacy  groups  themselves.  These  include:  “ego-­‐activism”  or  the  promotion  of  a  celebrity-­‐based  narrative,  a  “boutique  approach”  to  action  items,  and  liberal  human  rights  agenda  as  both  method  and  goal.    

A  fine  example  is  Invisible  Children  (IC).  Having  worked  in  Uganda  for  some  time,  the  senior  staff  of  IC  would  be  expected  to  possess  a  better  knowledge  of  the  situation  than  was  evident  in  the  KONY2012  video.  It  is  therefore  fair  to  conclude  that  this  video  intentionally  purveyed  a  misrepresentation  of  the  conflict  today,  so  as  to  make  the  viewers  of  the  video  feel  like  they  held  all  the  levers  for  control  and  necessary  understanding  in  their  own  hands.  For  this  reason,  one  might  call  this  “ego-­‐activism.”  

The  “boutique  approach”  to  conflicts  is  exemplified  by  the  conflict  minerals  campaign,  which  identifies  a  small  component  of  a  conflict  and  proposes  ways  to  address  that  in  isolation  from  the  wider  picture.  This  example  is  particularly  pertinent  because,  in  DRC,  the  question  conflict  minerals  is  not  of  central  concern  to  the  Congolese  population,  and  nor  is  income  from  these  minerals  the  central  factor  in  the  conflict  dynamic.  However,  boutique  activists  seized  upon  it  as  an  issue  because  it  was  seen  as  an  instance  in  which  U.S.  based  actors  could  make  an  impact.  Congolese  actors  placed  more  emphasis  on  transparency  in  contracts  of  major  mining  interests,  the  recent  elections,  and  governance  issues.  The  Frank-­‐Dodd  bill,  which  seeks  to  prohibit  international  companies  from  sourcing  minerals  from  DRC  and  neighboring  countries,  however,  has  made  an  impact:  it  forced  local  miners  out  of  work  as  companies  do  not  see  how  they  can  reliably  source  non-­‐conflict-­‐certified  minerals  from  DRC  and  so  buy  elsewhere;  and  it  impelled  armed  groups  to  seek  income  from  other  activities,  like  taxing  trade  at  checkpoints  and  extracting  assets  from  local  communities.  There  is  indeed  an  indication  that  predatory  violence  against  communities  in  eastern  DRC  has  increased  as  a  result  of  the  Dodd-­‐Frank  

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 None  of  these  measures  of  success  is  without  meaning—

however,  if  they  are  not  contextualized  within  a  larger  goal  of  transforming  conflict,  then  activism  itself  threatens  to  mistake  conflict  solutions  

for  activists’  own  measurements  of  what  “we”  

can  do.    

act.  All  this  was  foreseen  by  Congolese  activists  and  specialists  but  their  voices  were  not  heard  by  advocacy  groups  in  the  U.S.    

The  liberal  rights  agenda  historically  emerged  as  a  set  of  claims  against  the  violation  of  state  power,  but  has  often  become  a  prescription  for  political  solutions  as  no  more  than  a  pared-­‐down  agenda  of  individual  legal  remedies.  The  liberal  rights  agenda  too  often  leaves  unexamined  the  relationship  between  the  

assertion  of  rights  and  claims  and  the  enhancement  of  the  state’s  power,  through  its  monopoly  on  violence,  law  or  commercial  interests.  This  theme  was  exemplified  most  in  the  cases  of  Burma/Myanmar  and  Gaza.  In  both  cases  activists  who  were  primarily  local—Burmese  and  Israeli—relied  on  rights-­‐based  campaigns  to  expose  harms  done  in  conflict  situations  and  to  energize  a  political  agenda.    

In  the  case  of  Burma,  the  democracy  activists’  strategy  of  internationally  isolating  the  regime  also  resulted  in  isolating  the  people  from  the  opportunity  of  engaging  in  debate  on  their  future.  This  thereby  stifled  the  development  of  a  community-­‐based  approach  to  re-­‐thinking  governance.  Change,  then,  when  it  did  finally  come,  brought  an  opening  of  political  practice  alongside  an  opening  of  the  Burmese  economy  to  western  

investment,  but  no  society-­‐wide  discussion  of  rights.  In  the  context  of  the  growing  power  of  China,  the  U.S.  sought  to  win  Burma  away  from  an  exclusively  Chinese  sphere  of  influence,  and  brokered  an  elite  pact  that  provided  for  a  modest  degree  of  political  liberalization  without  fundamentally  altering  the  structure  of  power.  As  one  consequence,  assaults  against  ethnic  minorities  continue—and  have  even  escalated  in  the  case  of  the  Rohingya.    

In  Gaza,  Israeli  rights  activists  have  brought  many  legal  cases,  but  the  referral  to  the  courts  serves  to  protect  Israel’s  reputation  as  a  democratic  country  and  the  decisions  do  not  impact  Israeli  exclusion  of  populations  it  still  controls.  It  allows  the  illusion  of  rights  protection  without  affecting  the  core  conditions.  Humanitarian  measures  similarly  provide  for  the  essentials  to  reach  some  people,  but  distract  attention  from  the  obligations  that  fall  upon  the  Israeli  authorities.  Gaza  is  de  facto,  and  arguably  de  jure,  an  Israeli  occupied  territory  and  is  subject  to  policies  designed  to  degrade  the  capacity  of  the  local  people  to  live  in  a  dignified  manner  with  any  element  of  political  autonomy.  The  Israeli  government  has  become  ever  more  skilled  at  contesting  every  legal  technicality,  compelling  activists  to  measure  progress  in  ever-­‐smaller  quanta  of  legal  process,  with  less  and  less  relevance  to  the  actual  lives  of  the  people  of  Gaza.  It  is  arguable  that  the  small  measures  undertaken  to  ameliorate  the  situation  of  the  Gazans  are  lessening  the  pressure  on  Israel  to  live  up  to  its  moral  and  legal  obligations,  and  thus  prolonging  or  intensifying  the  suffering  and  violation  of  rights  of  the  residents  of  Gaza.  

Each  of  these  strategies  raises  questions  about  the  ultimate  goal  of  advocacy  campaigns  as  their  measures  

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of  success  are  often  distanced  from  the  change  in  social  conditions  and  political  empowerment  for  the  most  vulnerable  affected  communities.  In  ego-­‐activism,  the  amount  of  money  and  other  capacities  monopolized  by  the  implementation  of  a  marketing  campaign  often  results  in  measuring  success  within  in  terms  of  “awareness.”  In  the  boutique  model,  success  is  measured  by  discrete,  narrowly-­‐defined  policy  changes—as  passage  of  legislation,  for  instance.  In  the  liberal  agenda,  success  may  be  identified  as  a  measure  of  implementation  of  technical  tools,  such  as  legal  cases.    

None  of  these  measures  of  success  is  without  meaning—however,  if  they  are  not  contextualized  within  a  larger  goal  of  transforming  conflict,  then  activism  itself  threatens  to  mistake  conflict  solutions  for  activists’  own  measurements  of  what  “we”  can  do.  Simply  doing  things  within  “our”  reach  is  fundamentally  different  from  empowering  an  affected  people  and  resolving  the  conflict  and  violations  that  so  profoundly  affect  their  lives.  

A  further  challenge  to  both  strategies  and  goals  for  activism  is  "status  quo  activism,"  engagement  that  makes  a  pretense  of  challenging  the  status  quo  (in  the  U.S.)  but  in  fact  makes  such  minor  demands  on  policy  that  its  main  impact  is  to  tie  up  members  of  Congress  and  the  executive  in  lengthy  exercises  of  managing  public  relations.  The  kinds  of  demands  forwarded  to  the  U.S.  administration  by  these  campaigns  include  appointing  a  special  envoy  (for  Sudan),  maintaining  a  policy  of  keeping  several  scores  of  military  advisors  (for  Uganda),  or—the  most  substantive  for  U.S.  policy—changing  procurement  practices  for  companies.  In  none  of  the  cases,  was  a  profound  change  in  U.S.  policy  demanded.  

The  Save  Darfur  movement  is  a  striking  example:  it  rarely  asked  the  U.S.  government  to  alter  its  policies,  and  instead  rather  it  invariably  echoed  and  amplified  policy  decisions  already  made  by  the  Bush  Administration.  The  Darfur  campaign  came  most  into  conflict  with  the  U.S.  government  when  the  government  attempted  to  change  its  approach  in  line  with  the  evolving  conflict  while  activists  remained  attached  to  a  narrative  adopted  at  the  launch  of  the  Darfur  campaign  in  2004,  which  was  increasingly  out  of  step  with  changed  realities  in  Darfur.  

Professional  Incentives  

Such  newly  construed  international  activism  faces  significant  incentives  to  continue  to  develop  along  the  lines  outlined  herein—in  terms  of  fundraising,  visibility  and  political  influence.  The  seminar  participants  found  this  model  deeply  problematic  and  in  need  of  challenge.  But  moving  beyond  the  international  activists,  there  is  a  problematic  incentive  structure  within  the  “expert”  field  as  well—for  academicians  and  researchers,  professional  advancement  requires  production  of  scholarly  publications,  articulated  in  relation  to  the  developing  body  of  other  researchers.  There  are  few  incentives  to  value  accessibility  for  wider  publics.  The  field  is  therefore  left  open  for  superficial  analyses.  

Additionally,  academic  political  science  has  drifted  away  from  country-­‐level  political  analysis,  a  key  element  for  understanding  how  conflicts  unfold,  instead  valuing  large  datasets  that  convert  into  quantitative  studies.  Finally,  many  “expert”  insights  are  produced  with  limited  evidence  as  well—one  study  of  recent  

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 Rights  can  only  be  claimed  in  the  context  of  political  

struggle.    

research  reports  on  Southern  Sudan,  for  instance,  found  that  an  overwhelming  portion  focused  solely  on  Dinka  communities,  strikingly  concentrated  on  conditions  in  Juba,  the  capital.    

In  Conclusion:  which  limits  are  exposed?  

Publicity  grabbing  campaigns  on  places  in  conflict  have  been  criticized  for  how  they  offer  inaccurate  descriptions  of  conditions,  simplify  narratives,  promote  bad  policy  recommendations,  alienate  location  populations  and  end  up  by  deepening  or  prolonging  crisis.  It  is  worth  emphasizing,  however,  that  these  campaigns  mark  both  a  departure  from  as  well  as  a  continuation  of  previous  human  rights  practices.  They  depart  in  that  they  try  to  mobilize  the  public  on  a  scale  and  with  a  speed  never  before  attempted,  thereby  fixing  what  they  perceived  to  be  a  lack  of  motivation  for  U.S.  policymakers  to  take  international  rights  claims  seriously  because  there  was  no  organized  constituency  asking  for  change.  With  a  more  active  public,  so  the  theory  goes,  human  rights  issues  rise  on  the  national  agenda  and  better  solutions  are  implemented.  

The  chosen  modus  operandi  of  these  campaigns  is  to  operate  very  close  to  centers  of  power  in  Washington  DC,  seeking  policy  reform.  By  mobilizing  large  numbers  of  followers,  these  campaigns  superficially  resemble  mass  protest  movements.  In  fact,  they  are  more  akin  to  concert  going  crowds  choreographed  by  insider  lobbyists.  

These  campaigns  also  share  many  assumptions  of  the  professional  human  rights  field,  which  established  its  practices  as  naming  and  shaming  governments  into  curbing  abuses,  thereby  obliging  them  to  live  up  to  the  tenets  of  agreements  they  had  signed  onto  or  that  form  a  new  normative  consensus.  The  assumptions  reside  in  presenting  abuses  as  infractions  of  universal  values—an  ethical  betrayal  that  produces  clear  victims  and  perpetrators.  It  is  a  worldview  based  upon  a  set  of  liberal  norms  framed  in  legalistic  terms.  In  certain  cases,  this  has  opened  the  door  to  political  activism  for  more  profound  change,  as  happened  with  the  post-­‐1989  changes  in  eastern  Europe.  In  other  cases,  it  is  the  only  approach  possible,  and  activists  pursue  it  both  for  concrete  gains,  and  also  in  hope  of  opening  political  space  for  democratic  empowerment.    

But  there  is  also  an  alternative  worldview  that  focuses  instead  on  political  struggle  against  hegemonic  power.  This  approach  also  recognizes  rights  as  intrinsically  valuable,  but  argues  that  they  can  only  be  claimed  in  the  context  of  political  struggle.  To  the  extent  that  campaigning  for  a  narrow  spectrum  of  human  rights  or  advocating  for  the  U.S.  to  pursue  more  ethical  policies  in  its  foreign  relations  diverts  attention  from  the  principal  political  issues,  that  form  of  rights-­‐based  activism  may  not  in  fact  advance  

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 Without  seriously  engaging  their  record  and  being  open  to  self-­‐criticism,  these  campaigns  do  their  ideals—let  alone  the  very  populations  on  whose  

behalf  they  claim  to  be  advocating  —a  serious  

disservice.    

rights  in  an  effective  and  sustainable  manner.  It  may—in  the  memorable  phrase  of  one  writer—leave  local  people  “prisoners  of  freedom.”1  

Without  a  theory  of  power,  and  working  strictly  within  the  boundaries  established  by  the  U.S.  political  establishment—albeit  by  global  standards  a  remarkably  democratic  and  accessible  hegemon—today’s  broad-­‐based  campaigns  amplify  this  ethical,  universalist,  legal  approach.    These  campaigns  testify  to  a  limit  of  human  rights  as  a  framework  for  social,  economic  or  political  change.  This  does  not  in  any  sense  mean  that  rights  are  useless,  but  rather  than  they  cannot  accomplish  all  aspects  of  social  justice  or  political  change.  

These  “designer  activist”  campaigns  do  not  advertise  the  limits  of  their  capacity  for  enacting  change.  On  the  contrary,  they  promise  that  much  can  be  achieved  by  many  Americans  doing  remarkably  little.  Consequently,  a  theme  that  arose  in  the  seminar  was  the  danger—indeed  the  reality—of  exhaustion  and  disenchantment  among  supporters  of  the  campaigns.  This  draws  attention  to  the  likelihood  that  young  

people  in  Europe  and  America  becoming  disillusioned  and  cynical  when  the  promised  goals  are  not  reached.  Although,  as  one  participant  remarked  in  reference  to  reports  of  “Congo  fatigue”  among  American  activists  and  Congressmen,  the  Congolese  are  not  fatigued  with  their  country.  

Equally  troubling  whether  one  is  critical  of  how  campaigns  have  been  practiced  or  the  framework  that  they  assume,  is  the  allergy  to  criticism  that  such  campaigns  exhibit.  As  demonstrated  repeatedly  in  the  African  cases,  and  exemplified  by  the  campaigns  mounted  by  the  Enough  Project,  such  activism  has  only  a  passing  acquaintance  with  facts,  in  contrast  with  their  leaders’  intimacy  with  powerbrokers.  Without  seriously  engaging  

their  record  and  being  open  to  self-­‐criticism,  these  campaigns  do  their  ideals—let  alone  the  very  populations  on  whose  behalf  they  claim  to  be  advocating  —a  serious  disservice.    

The   seminar   concluded   with   an   emergent   authentic   activist   agenda,   which   is   the   need   for   those   who  genuinely   care   about   the   empowerment   of   the   people   affected   by   these   conflicts,   to   find   ways   of  challenging  those  responsible  for  the  immediate  violation  of  rights  and  the  perpetuation  of  armed  conflict,  as  well   as   those  who  pretend   to  offer   solutions   that,   however  well   packaged,   are  no  more   than   a   self-­‐serving  illusion.  Among  the  specific  challenges  were  addressing  complexity  and  confusion,  finding  ways  of  

                                                                                                                         

1  Englund,  Harri,  Prisoners  of  Freedom:  Human  Rights  and  the  African  Poor  (Berkeley  and  Los  Angeles:  University  of  California  Press,  2006).  

Advocacy  In  Conflict  Seminar  Note            14    

 April  2013  

speaking   truth   to   governmental   decision   makers   and   their   celebrity-­‐activist   partners,   and   refining   the  criteria  for  doing  no  harm  in  advocacy—raising  “bewareness.”  

 

Note:  Additional  information  about  this  seminar,  including  short  essays  by  several  participants,  can  be  found  on  the  World  Peace  Foundation  blog,  Reinventing  Peace,  http://sites.tufts.edu/reinventingpeace/  .